José Amén-Palma

José Amén-Palma (Portoviejo, October 23, 1926) is an Ecuadorian surgeon and medical researcher.

His passion for medicine led him to make countless research, of which two stand out: a technique to prevent bleeding during urological interventions and another to do digestive surgeries with the autograft-method also known as "fascia lata" - to reinforce the inguinal hernia.

He was awarded the Ecuadorian National Prize "Premio Eugenio Espejo" in 2011 for his lifetime work in the field of Science.[1]

Biography

Amén-Palma was born in Portoviejo, Ecuador on October 23, 1926 . He graduated with a medical degree from the University of Guayaquil with a thesis on urethral stricture, specifically those of traumatic origin. He specialized in Barcelona at the Puigvert Urology and Nephrology Institute, and in Mexico with Professor Ruben Gittes of Harvard University. He has attended numerous international urology-related conferences.

He was a practicing doctor in the Portoviejo Medical Hospital between 1957-2009, where he developed new surgical techniques, including one that helped control hemorrhaging during prostate surgery.[2]

He was a member of various medical institutions and member of the Academy of Medicine of Catalonia, member of the Ecuadorian Academy of Medicine, a founding member of the National Society of Ophthalmology, Member of the Society of Gastroenterology; member of the Ecuadorian Society of Urology and Meritorious Society of Medical Surgery of Guayas.

He was also editor of the Medical Journal of Manabi (1969) and author of numerous scientific articles. He authored "Innovations in surgical technique : contribution to hemostasis in prostatic surgery and hernia repair with fascia lata autograft.

Awards

References